THE DAILY NEWS fAGE FOUR The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT BRITISH COLUMBIj Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue. 11. P. PULLEN - - - Managing Editor. City Delivery, by WiIrWrta, yi JflfTeVlort, paid in advance $5.00 " DAILY EDITION Tuesday, January 29, 1929 IS -MONEY EVERYTHING THE ENGLISH LABOR PARTY (Montreal Evening Journal) There were lively times at a recent labor meeting in Cross-cut, Crescent Ground, will saw 10 more timber, lime and labor being equal, than anyothcr i made. This guarantee has never been challenged. I SIMQNOS CANADA SAW CO., LIMITED, j T. dim tTHlIT duo ACORN AVCNUI. MONTRCAL. Out. VANCOUVER. D C rOPONTO, OUT. T JOHN.N.B. S-1 39 WOMEN IN DEATH CHAMBER For lesser period, paid induce per months 'J L (X . i y ' ;-60 ' Ifd WUh IIer By mail to all parts of Northern Hi Central BruWCoIumUa. Irvine Mcn and MaM is paia in advance ior yeariy perioa 1 o.w. Transient Display Advertising, per Inch, per insertion i.4J Transient Advertising on Front Page, per inch . H) Local Readers, per Insertion, per line ... Classified Advertising, per Insertion, per .word 2 Leiral Notices, each insertion per auatcline . ... 15 Or four monthi fnr 9vit . By mail to all other parts ct bilsh,, ColymbfaV' the British Empire and United States, paid in advance per year By mail to all other countries, per yeai .' Contract Rates on Application Advertising and -Circulation Telephone 93 Ed'tor and Reporters Tefehne - 86 5ember of Audit Buieau of Circulations $0.00 PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 29: An ancient cemetery in Ur of ;ftip rhaldeea has given up to the joint expedition of the univer sity of Pennsylvania Museum ana British Museum additional in- lui itinuuii p ! rites of Sumerian royalty 5.000 (years ago. Many ob;'ects of gold and silver, of pritetess archaeological value, also have been found. In reporting the resumption of work by the joint expedition, C. Leonard Woolley, the director, in a letter made public hore, said the new diecoveries included gold daggers, a cylinder t aea Ir-J t Mir T.l.. Tl... .'WA ur I.. .lit ' 1 V , .... ... . aeriDeu iues-n.iuuuu 'jun iuoney is uwjftas very useful, om we are a lime m-, Kl a -paini cIay pot beng-; clined to look upon it as the only thjtng that counts in this ing to a pre-hutorie civiiizatjon,-life. In our mad efforts to make money we lose, much of a copper head believed to be from the real joy of living. I the statue of a god, gold head- Then comes a poet who turnsour thoughts awayfrom the whirl of business toward the beauties of nature, He t0 have been the first object sues me reai essence 01 inuiaa anu crysuimzes mem into 0f its kind found in Ur. being so that ordinaryjieopjfijiiay oatch.glimpses of them. That is poetry's contribution to life. The objects were uncovered in the cemetery where the expedition in 1927 and 1928 discovered several oval graves, Including the tomb of Queen Shub-Ad, and where work was begun again about two months ago at the opening oi the seventh season of Glasgow, Stronghold Of that section of the party Which excavations in Mesopotamia. f es by the name of '.'Clydesiders." Arthur Henderson ,1 JKSSLS J. Wheatley and David Kirkwood were to speak. When iayer8 of drains had "played they appeared on the platform, there were roars of deri- havoc" with yi6,lu8eTt ieveU of-sion and shoutg pf .Vsny " .".muKderer.?, "traitor ,i Kirk-.ithe eeiterj Jjut? tut- It, tod'. wood, who has fimirprl inmnnv. n tiirhnlent Kpnn.?n itho been, .pottible to observe as never; Mother of Parliaments, leaped from the platform, 'took ,fofe jH :?1t?ffrt!l;?UonJ off his spectacles and buttoned up his coat in a signif icanl SbStot" -id. way. The stewards got around, Wm,and persuaded i,im "we found, not the tomb cham- tO go back. . ', , , bcr of tie King, which must He A minute later, the disturbance began again, and Kirk- under th 8011 not yet excated, wood again rushed-into thecrowd calling out: "I am go- but -tha death pu inoperable ing to be;in it." The police threw out-aew-communists, WSi; ZntJLSi The choir sang "Scots Wha'Hae'nd the commqnists SK", retorted with their "International," and a joyful tiine en- the bodfes of 39 women and one sued. There were-17 arrests.,,, .... ,.-,v , . man lyiip In more or lts ordered The incident suggests that-all is not harmony- in Eng "w. u land's labor ranks. This is inconvenient from a partv "Another shaft opened more point of view, ff JUSTS at the general election next slimmer. Trie breach between daggers- with gold blades and socialists and communists grows wider. The aim of the goid-stwided handles and a cyiin-two are identical; but they differ as to methods. The der seal inscribed -"Mes-Kaicm-communists wish to bring about the millennium at once Du the Ki"K " This King, one and by violent means; the socialists are for parliamentary TL?uprT' a "lat,vf of action JVhat puzzles a looker-on is that the communists "iSS should denounce consitutional methods, and stul send spectacular finds of last swison. jnen to parliament. But who looks for consistency in Coffin nurled Statesmen? I "immediately below the lox ;came a coffin burial with stone SPARRING FOR ADVANTAGE !nd copper vessels and a mas This constant .aparriue for advantage of the United ' ! vessels extending over States and Canacla is a constant cause of friction. If the whota wk building which only the peopte ol mate the tariff or cut it (lown to a minimum on a num- tive pots and more subsidiary ber of commodities in. vyhih lthcoimti'ies are interested, -burials, all asperated by floors it would be better for everyone concerned . This constant of beatm clay or by strata of possibility of .clmngjrk yaw untiling, tf bi$ne&i tiWtojPSL CT, pose anhing vf AltyrfU inhere Wfi Bjr rigflt,0 weg clay cooMng and of bonding gQdC'trfrdligh onff oountrytO-andthor, thenimai bones which were the would be no end to the dislocation of trade. With half reiics of a funeral feast or s&c-the Canadian wheat crop shipped through the Str.tes, Hfice made in the pit itself, think what it would mean to the country to the south if "rhlor ere, !, a btrrBn four were men-servants or sold- Unfortunately Prince Rupert happens to be right m im, and the fifth a aerving. the war area, because of the fish bonding which takos maid, while the sixth body was place through the port. If it were stopped there would ihit of th wmn in whose hon-at once be strong pressure brought on the government at or the tomb had been built. Here Ottawa to stop all Canadian grain going south and insist we mnf raor ovf ,e" co"' . .. u . n ventlonal head-dress of gold rib- that It go out through Canadian ports. bon. and leaves, beads, ear-ring What is needed today is more freedom of trade instead .,nd finer-ring. and a mn of of constant restrictipns. If tht Ulijted States 4 ctfnnot unusuaj Hrpe which is verj long agree to more freedom, then Canddttlflfe fight her own and of solid gold. V.ofloe iv, h,, u-av r.nnatunt nrvMifA in tViP tariff "The bodies In the tomb had mean constant discontent at the present situation on both pides . been covered with some sort of a wood n canopy and lav on u brick floor above a trru-cotta drain. Theoutr court of tho tomb halt yet to be dug. We know only (bat outside .the stone blocking Kintr ,0n ,9n the me door uoor there inert- were wrre set 'area airsUp v8ehl?tfwS were other human sacrifices it Is Impossible to say, but at least we have the servants In the tomb, and, in the filling-in nf the shaft, tier above tier of fond vessels and meat offerings and human skeletons. The burial rites wore elaborate indeed and the precise meaning of them Is likely to remain a matter of conjecture for a long time. Baby Princess 1 ma head-dress which was almost a replica in .miniature of that worn was earefully cut away to ex-l06e the cast there were found surviving lines of white fibrous powder the ten cat-gut string of uwicr riKii uraves nae !tho harp. unearthed. One, which minhti . , liw, 1 u-a ua iu tua -,. I r lt. !, i.i. hni,v 'Tromii "Prominent among our Qther Princess, contained the body of ,f,ndf, ,aro a CPPW. tatue-head, Excavators L,xcaaiors in in Ur ur 01 of the wit viiaiu Chaldees gold 'possibly a god, having a human Tomb of a King DAfiOERS FOUND Discovered face and the horns and cars of a bull, And a painted ,cl firiMfedtoi toy. pot. by Queep SJub-Ad In the same I JJK th XTOj Set kn found It Url 'Valhted grave was found a of minlat-ot ure silver vessels, including a01" "l ' '.a " tumbler and bowls, which seem-. ed pathetically appropriate. "Another mast interesting dis cove., covery was . that huh u of a B harp. nary, The w.c "We are just starting on the low stratum where, according to last year's experience and the ,ndJcatlon of tni8 season's work, woodwork of the Instrument had ' . , . ,m. 0 . ,.,, .. decayed and disappeared, but luckily workmen fjioticed the holes which it hail left in the soil, and by fillfng these with (1YP8UM.IN NOVA SCOTIA; (iirpsum was mined in Nova plaster of Paris we obtained ajScotia as early as 1829, but it is complete cast of the harp's bodyln recent years that the industry to which was attached the bull i has had its most remarkable ex- head of copper Inlaid with lapos aull. pansion. The present output of over 800,000 tons annually ia "The most . astonishing thing j more than three times that was the fact that wht-n the earth 'all the rest of Canada. of Tursday, January 29, 1929 The Advisory Council of tht- Civil Service Superannuation .t'el for tho first time recently when V. C. Ph;ilen (left), Presid-it of 'the divil Service Federation of Canada, was made Secretin . an.l C. 1 . i'laxton, K.C. (right) of the Department of Justice, c-!eri?d Chairman of the Council. The functions of the com-iM e wil! lie to nit in an advisory capacity on questions of a "neral nature in connection with the administration of the Civil Service Superannuation Act; specific questions which may be referred to the Treasury Board, and proposed amendment! to the Sup ernnnuation Act and Regulations. mm. treasure house TWENTY years' mining in British Columbia have yielded nearly , 800-million dollars. 1 he last ten years have increased production by 58.9 per cent. , The value of all Canada's prbdufctlon is $25.78 Der dtlian,- BrltUh Columbia's production today, it distriputed, would meanSlll. and .treated tonnage of metalliferous ores raacfoekl a record of more than 5-million The value of the mining Industry to th Province Is In the distribution of money in wages, supplies, transportation services, etc. And in this respect, 1927 was n record year! The 14,000 employees of the mlnlnfi industry were paid wages totalling 23 million dollars . . . or nearly $1,7(!0 each . . . tho highest average for any Canadian Province. During the year, distribution of eight million dollars was made in dividends! Ilritlsh Columbia mines approximately 40 million dollars worth of copper, zinc and lead, a year . . . more than the rest of Canada. In gold and sliver, our production ranks second ... In coal, third; our total annual mining production today being exceeded only by Ontario. Sound legislation, good mining laws and low fees have encouraged this development and stimulated growth. Although the provincial if'- V mining area has only been superficially pros- Eccted within the transportation belt, new elds are developing, new roads and trails constantly being built. Chattering drills sink deeper and deeper Into the hills . . . heavy ores rumble through the concentrators . . . fortrues come tumbling from tho treasure chest of Ilritlsh Columbia! What was once only Imagined about our mining potentialities, is now proven knowledge. Mining has become our third largest Industry... bowing over 67 million dollars revenue a Ctrtsb-Cfnanahat ,r'PerUy ,,0Url8,,CS ,n Cs;pltal horn Eastern Canada, tho United States, Great Britain, France . . . seeks Investment. Ourgrcat wealth of production, dcvelop- ,,U Kill! y nu.r,n the P ten yl"t has established confidence and aroused keen Interest In Hrltlsh Columbia's mining future tho world over; thttt unnoHncemtnti and uiuiiriUnA , P"W,S r tif 'V Put wA send Mf m to i niwijMptr wumni Hum. Xdmtitt your Pre . . , ti n. as i marmtmuur' IT " t C N. Ml